Administration%20and%20Absorption%20of%20Drugs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Administration%20and%20Absorption%20of%20Drugs

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... drug molecules will bind to these large proteins reducing the amount of 'free' ... When these free molecules leave the blood stream, bound molecules become unbound ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Administration%20and%20Absorption%20of%20Drugs


1
Administration and Absorption of Drugs
2
Factors that effect the action of a drug
  • 1. Rate of accumulation at its site of action
  • 2. Concentration of the drug at the site of
    action
  • 3. The duration of the drugs contact at those
    sites

3
Pharmocokinetics
  • Refers to the movement of chemicals in a
    biological system
  • This includes
  • Administration and absorption
  • Distribution
  • Binding properties
  • Metabolic mechanisms
  • Elimination from the system

4
Administration of drugs
  • To be effective a drug must enter the body and
    get to its site of action
  • Best method of administration of a drug depends
    on the drug
  • Most drugs dissolved in a fluid (saline) or
    contained in a mixture as in pills or capsules
    type of substance is important
  • Injections tend to be fast acting, oral
    administration is usually slow acting and of a
    longer duration

5
Routes of administration Enteral routes
  • Administered through the alimentary canal oral
    or anal
  • Common problem is that absorption rate can be
    highly variable
  • Absorption of orally administered drugs is
    greatly influenced by stomach contents
  • Hostile acid environment can interfere with
    absorption
  • Other problems
  • Some people cannot take pills
  • Uncooperative patients may refuse or cheek them

6
Routes of administration Parenteral routes
  • Injection
  • Intravenous drug injected into vein
  • Advantages fastest way administer drug and
    dosage most accurate
  • Disadvantages chance of infection if conditions
    not sterile and no way to retrieve the drug in
    case of allergic or toxic reaction
  • Intramuscular drug injected into muscle mass
    slower but safer
  • Subcutaneous injection under the skin or
    implanted under the skin
  • Direct injection in the nervous system

7
Routes of administration Parenteral routes
  • Pulmonary routes inhalation into the lungs
  • Topical routes placing drug on the surface
    usually a surface with a mucous membrane
  • Sublingual placed under the tongue
  • Intranasal powder or liquid absorbed through
    mucous membrane in the nose
  • Skin skin patches or topical anesthesia

8
Absorption of Drugs
  • With the exception of drugs directly injected
    into the nervous system and topical anesthesia,
    drugs have to cross at least 2 membranes to
    reach its site of action
  • At a minimum, it has to cross into the blood
    stream, out of the blood stream, and into the
    cell
  • Walls of blood vessels and cell membranes are
    semi-permeable

9
The bloodstream and drug movement
  • How fast a drug gets into the bloodstream depends
    on route of administration
  • Once in the blood, a drug has access to all types
    of tissue, muscle, fat skin, lungs, etc.

10
Structure of capillaries
  • Capillaries in most of the body are made up of
    cells with gaps in between the cells
  • These gaps allow some substances, but not blood
    cells of large proteins, to move in and out of
    the capillaries
  • Some drug molecules will bind to these large
    proteins reducing the amount of free molecules
    in the blood
  • When these free molecules leave the blood stream,
    bound molecules become unbound to maintain a
    stable concentration

11
Blood brain barrier
  • In the brain, the cells are more tightly packed
    so molecules have to move through the cells
    themselves this makes up part of the
    blood-brain barrier
  • Astrocytes make up the rest of the blood-brain
    barrier by sending out feet that help seal the
    capillary walls

12
Blood-brain barrier
  • Very few substances can cross this barrier
  • Membranes of the capillary cells and astrocytes
    are made up of lipids
  • Only lipid soluble substances can be absorbed
    into the cells and pass through them
  • This barrier important because the brain has no
    immune system

13
Movement across semi-permeable membranes
  • Three types of fluid
  • Fluid in the bloodstream
  • Fluid outside the cells extra cellular fluid
  • Fluid inside the cells intracellular fluid
  • These fluids can move back and forth across
    membranes
  • Example thirst
  • Lack of fluid in blood
  • Extra cellular fluid moves into bloodstream
  • Intracellular fluid moves out of the cells
  • Loss of fluid detected signal sent to drink

14
Movement across semi-permeable membranes
  • Filtration as fluid moves into a cell the
    membrane filters out large molecules which
    include many drug molecules
  • Movement through diffusion follows chemical
    gradient chemicals flow from areas of high
    concentration to areas of low concentration
  • If a chemical is highly concentrated outside a
    cell, and openings exist, it will move into the
    cell

15
Placental Barrier
  • A weak barrier between mother and fetus
  • Large amounts of materials are exchanged between
    mother and fetus
  • Most drugs easily cross the placental barrier
    almost every drug a mother takes the fetus takes

16
Solubility
  • Lipid soluble drugs drugs that can be dissolved
    in lipids fatty substances that make up cell
    membranes including the blood-brain barrier
  • Water soluble drugs drugs that can dissolve in
    water they will not passively move through a
    cell membrane so they require active transport
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